Meeting Management Techniques for Project Managers

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I’ve been booking meetings for the next couple of months because I know my team gets very busy, and if we don’t schedule the time we won’t meet to talk about the big stuff.

We meet weekly anyway, but for Phase 2 planning and other parts of our program that have a longer-term goal, we need to lift up out of the weekly task list and get some space.

If it’s not booked, it won’t happen.

Knowing how to manage a meeting is one of the core skills for project managers. Whether they are big strategic visioning type meetings for your programs or the daily stand up or somewhere in between, we spend a lot of time meeting with other people.

Looking for more resources to make your meetings run more smoothly? Scroll to the bottom for more info on templates, checklists, and a guide for meetings.

What Are Meeting Management Techniques?

Meeting management techniques are what you do during and around the meeting to facilitate the conversation and get action.

You Can Be Examined On Meeting Management Techniques

If you’ve taken your PMP® exam then you’ll know that something called ‘meeting management techniques’ used to be part of the cross-cutting knowledge and skills.

Meeting management skills are no longer part of the Exam Content Outline (ECO), which you can download from the PMI website. Instead, the ECO talks about communication, knowledge transfer, engaging the team, governance, and a whole lot more that you would often use meetings to accomplish.

The PMBOK® Guide — Seventh Edition talks about 15 types of meeting you can expect to have, and that isn’t a comprehensive list.

In short, you need to have a general understanding of how to make meetings work for you.

Even if you aren’t studying to become a PMP® it never hurts to remind yourself what good meeting best practices look like.

Basic Meeting Best Practices (Skip This If You Chair Meetings Once A Week)

There are loads of different types of project meetings, and we spend enough time in them to feel comfortable… at least, we should feel comfortable.

I’m pretty sure that you don’t need much reminding about Meeting Management 101 but in case you want a refresh:

  • Have an agenda (and write it properly: read my 10 tips for meeting agendas)
  • Get the right people there
  • Start and finish on time
  • Record what happened
  • Follow up afterwards.

There. You’re all caught up.

Bad Meetings: What Not To Do

Given that we go to meetings all the time, and the above list isn’t exactly rocket science, why are some meetings so awful?

You know the ones: already this week I’ve been to one that didn’t have an agenda and another where I have no expectation of nothing being minuted.

I went to a seminar recently which was poorly organized. The AV equipment didn’t work. The video kept stopping, and as they’d made a little video to introduce each of the topics, providing background information for those people who hadn’t got a lot of personal experience about the subject, that was inconvenient.

The chair found it hard to give different people the floor as several people were due to give short presentations but he couldn’t make the laptop show their slides.

There was lots of downtime. Lots of disengagement from us in the room. And no clear objectives.

I came out of it wondering why I had been there and I certainly didn’t get anything out if it.

I’m sure you’ve had similar experiences.

Why Don’t We Run Better Meetings?

People don’t spend time preparing for meetings because they don’t have much time in the day and it doesn’t feel important.

It’s also easy to assume that other people give our project the same level of importance as we do, so we assume that they are coming to the meeting knowing all about it and having done their prep.

People don’t follow up after meetings because doing minutes is boring! (You can get around that with automated meeting transcription tools).

Or, because they feel like they don’t have time to document properly. Or because they assume other people will remember their tasks and actually follow up on them, as that is what they would do.

Unfortunately, when you get real people with real jobs in a room, there’s a lot less preparation and follow through and a lot more frustration than you hoped for, and we’re constantly surprised by it when we haven’t set the team up to succeed.

Here are 7 management meeting techniques to boost your team’s success and help you get through your meetings without so much frustration.

1: Have A Purpose

Your meeting should have an objective, even if that is simply to get everyone to the same level of understanding.

If you don’t know why you are having the meeting and you aren’t clear what you are going to get out of it, then cancel it.

Tip: If someone asks, “Why are we meeting?” you should be able to answer with one sentence, without hesitating. Anything else probably means you aren’t clear yourself.

2: Deal With People In Cars

People join conference calls from cars. We are all busy, I get it. But you can’t let it distract you unduly.

It is better to not let people join from their car. It’s dangerous and the quality is normally a bit on and off. If possible, ask them to decline the meeting and/or delegate their attendance to someone else.

If you know someone is joining your meeting from their car:

  • Ask them to go on mute
  • Expect them to drop in and out. This isn’t great, so it is better if they can pull over safely.
  • Remember that they won’t have their notes or be able to take notes, so bear that in mind – they’ll need reminding of any actions they agreed to.
  • Be wary of their safety. Don’t expect them to lead a discussion or use their brain too much when their focus should be on keeping safe on the road.

3: Check Your Tech

I work from home a lot so I use webinars, Skype, conference calls, video: all kinds of things to keep in touch with my team. And nothing annoys me more than joining a virtual meeting and finding that the tech doesn’t work.

So check it.

Test it with a colleague so you know how it works. Once you’re confident that you can start and operate your meeting then:

  • Check your settings – if you are sharing screens make sure you don’t accidentally share anything you don’t want attendees to see such as your email inbox. The easiest way to do this is to close any other apps
  • Turn off pop ups. Skype has an annoying habit of popping up who is now online, and other apps do the same.
  • Remember that on video people can see you! It’s very easy to forget that your webcam is turned on and it’s not nice to watch someone pick their nose. They will be able to tell if you are multi-tasking on your phone too.

Tip: Just because we’ve spent a lot of time since 2020 working in virtual teams doesn’t mean everyone is confident (still with tech). Especially if it is a tool they don’t use very often. Do trial runs if you need to so attendees feel comfortable.

4: Don’t Default To Mute

I have conflicting views about going on mute. If you are on mute you can do other things, type up the call notes as you go, add items to your bullet journal, and so on. But if you stay off mute you are more inclined to participate fully and not multi-task, especially as you know that other people will hear the keyboard strikes in the background.

You’ll have to make your own judgment on that. To be honest I am more often on mute than not, because there is background noise where I work.

5: Be On Time

Dial-in on time. Turn up to the meeting room on time. Don’t make the meeting last longer than necessary – if you have more to add propose another time to go through it.

It’s good manners.

6: Contact The Attendees In Advance

It never hurts to set the scene and expectations.

I catch up with people before the meeting, talking about what we are going to talk about and asking their views on the key topics. The point of doing this is to minimize surprises during the meeting itself. In turn, that can cut the conflict and I can also make sure they get a chance to raise their points at the right time.

If you want your meeting to end up with a decision don’t underestimate the amount of influence you have in getting there by doing some pre-work informally with your attendees. I don’t mean influence about which way the decision goes, but being able to influence that your decision gets made. You can check that everyone has the data that would make them feel comfortable about deciding and you can steer them away from a “We can’t decide today, let’s meet next week,” outcome.

7: Do The Work

The people coming to the meeting aren’t project managers (most of the time) and they all have other things to do in a day that are competing for their time. So if you want the meeting to have a positive outcome, do the work I’ve talked about here. Get that agenda prepared and issued, follow up.

Aside from the cost of software to facilitate virtual meetings like conference call lines, the cost of a good meeting is just your time. It’s worth it. If you don’t have good meetings management techniques then you’ll find people won’t engage seriously with your project.

They won’t complete their actions and they won’t turn up on time.

Set the standard and expectations and help them be successful in their actions by giving them the framework.

My Personal Pre-Meeting Routine

I use standard agendas as much as possible, and standard minutes template so I don’t have to create from scratch every time.

Before the meeting I will print a copy of the agenda and the minutes from last time. I do this because I don’t like having to rely on my laptop especially if I am moving to a meeting room for the meeting.

I’ll get to the room early, having already got a cup of tea. Unless you’ve built in a few minutes at the beginning of your agenda for refreshments then your meeting should start on time, not with people popping out to boil the kettle.

If I’m connecting my laptop to show a presentation or something then I’ll do that before other people arrive.

I’ll also make sure that I have my list of informal questions – the things that I want to follow up with the attendees that fall outside the standard agenda but that I can get away with asking during the breaks or at the beginning and end. In this way I can catch up on progress with lots of small actions and make the most of seeing people.

Also, if I have made or brought cake then I’ll open the tin and lay out napkins, forks, and plates, and probably cut a slice for myself. Otherwise, people tend to hold back and not eat it!

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